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Tom D

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Everything posted by Tom D

  1. they are great if you don't mind being seriously over weight. My mate has one , it weighs 3 ton empty:scared1: Take it for a test drive... to the neaerest public weighbridge.
  2. Try local agricultural shows, or even better craft fairs, there's a company up here who I've sold timber to in the past, I saw their stall at the edinburgh wood fest , which is a sort of craft fair held once a year in town. All they were doing was selling boards, some wany edged some not to the general public, for seriously high prices. If you have nice, interesting timber all you need to do is show it to the right people and they will buy it for silly money.
  3. I have also been climbing for 6 years, in tree work for 9, I dont claim to be the worlds best climber but I do love rigging, the more difficult ther job the more interesting it is, however, I also love simplicity and I think finding the simplest way to complete a job safely is the real challenge of dismantling. I did my first speedline job a few months back, I had gone 5 years without doing one because I had always found a simpler way, eventualy a job came along where a speedline was the simplest way. I think what you can see in this vid is the simplest way of getting the job done. and if you think there's too much slack you should have seen some of the stuff I did today, we were felling out tops of a multistemmed euc from 8 feet above the pulley... Why? because it was the simplest way of getting it down the pieces only weighed 50-100kg and there were plenty of leaves on them to slow their swing. I am sure that Mike understands the laws of physics and that if her was butt hitching 1ton lumps of oak hed use a bigger pulley and have less slack, but as he's a seasoned pro he's learned where rules can be bent and where they can't, just like a few others on here.
  4. Just watched it again. I just spent today lowering with the exact same pulley that Mike was using. Since when can't you use one of them?? I have a large pulley for really heavy stuff but why lug that into the tree if you're only lowering small stuff?
  5. Really funny, clever advertising. Would actually be quite cool though.
  6. Which takes us back to the balance issue, I said If I was using one hand for balance I would one hand a topper. If there is no balance issue then of course two hands is fine, either with a chainsaw or silky:001_smile:
  7. Often the problem with a silky in tip work is that the saw digs in and the brench bends, you end up having to saw without rhythm which is a bit like patting your head whilst rubbing your stomach. Going one handed whilst using a topper is just common sense really, if you can comfortably get two hands on it then do, if you can't then don't.. simples:001_smile: With the ones in the vid I probably wouldn't have gone one handed, just jump cutted them, but I certainly wouldn't have a go at Mike, clearly he can handle a saw, how he works is up to him.
  8. if the tractor hydraulics are too slow, why not just put the pump on the pto? an adaptor would be easy to come by I would imagine.
  9. I try to avoid one handing, but it would ba crazy to two hand everything, I often use one habd for a balancing hold whilst cutting on the tips of a branch. I also avoid cutting and holding but still will under some circumstances eg dismantling over a greenhouse, after rigging a section off I often cut and hold the stub.
  10. Are you saying he spends too much time brushing his teeth?
  11. Tom D

    Fridays!

    Bad luck mate, sometimes all the s**t happens in one day. I remember once working in Edinburgh with a 12" bandit on a big mog, the chute had to be turned to the side to tip, on returning fron the dump I started her up and two of my colleagues fed a 10" x 8foot birch log into the beast, two seconds later there was a lot of chip over three seperate front gardens, none of which was the one we were working at, and worst of all one of them was landscaped in large pebbles, took about 2 hours to clean it up. I seem to remember that was a friday too. Hope the finger heals quickly. I just remembered a conversation I had with a client on the phone once, he sounded like he had a pair of socks in his mouth. It turned out he'd been hit by a car and hurt his back, the hospital had discharged him with some strong pain killers, unfortunately too strong, they made him so dizzy that he stacked it on the hospital steps on the way out and smashed his teeth in on a handrail:scared1: I know I shouldn't, but it still makes me smile thinking about it.
  12. Big areas! since the hourly rate would start when the truck leaves the yard, I wouldn't mind. But you still haven't said what the work would be or how much you anticipate there being.
  13. Getting nerdy about this now, average rainfall Dunbar: 600mm:001_smile: Average rainfall Huddersfield: 814mm:sad: Average rainfall Manchester: 809mm!!! cant beleive you're wetter than Skyhuck, assuming he is in Manchester. Glasgow (closest I could get to Largs) :1015mm Anglesey :843mm Looks like SWB is the wettest unless anyone can top a whopping metre of rain each year. Clearly I need to go to bed now:ohmy:
  14. Worth noting I suppose that the decay is on the tension side of the limb. This is where any reaction wood would want to develop in a broadleaf to maintain structural integrity.
  15. I think any wood left in large lumps will not dry much, if at all in fact it will rot before it dries. Even indoors large lumps will take a long time to dry, ask a wood turner. Tarps will make things worse, rain will not make much difference either, the benefit of the tarp keeping the rain off is far outweighed by the lack of air circulation. I know this because a few years ago I used a yard surrounded by trees and which had weeds growing around the log piles. Even this was enough to really slow the drying process. Now, by luck rather than any judgement, I have an exposed yard near the sea, it is always windy and I regularly roundup the area to keep the weeds down. I can dry green beech (as split logs ) down to 20% moisture in just 1 year, this is just left in a big pile, no tarp. When it rains the outer logs get wet, but they are the first to dry in the wind so it balences itself out. One thing I have noticed is that even after heavy persistant rain, break the surface of a pile and the logs are dry after a foot or so, also split a rain wet log and its dry inside. The original moisture / sap in the log takes a while to loose but rain will not penetrate a dry log unless it is in contact with wet plants or soil. In shorty the best way to dry your rings Dean is to keep them uncovered off the ground in the most exposed part of your yard that you can find. BTW the vented log bags are working a treat.
  16. As others have said, never work on day rate, there's so much that can go wrong, breakdowns etc, or even just popping to the bank to pay some cheques in, they are going to want to see you working the whole time. Give a price for the job then if you turn up with 10 men and finish it in an hour or take 2 days on your tod it makes no odds to them. I got shafted recently and ended up £300 out of pocket, when I threatened to go legal they threatened to go to local papers etc. sometimes you just have to let it go.
  17. Had mine 2 years, the hexfoam is fine, blemish free in fact. The webbing has slight fraying on it but still passes loler fine.
  18. Gust got rid of my ldv, it was fairly reliable over the last three years, just gutless. I've bought a transit.
  19. Tom D

    Paulownia

    There are loads of them in France and they'll pollard anything. TBH all the ones i have seen done (which was most of them) have taken it very well.
  20. The view from an ash I was working on last week.
  21. Acer pseudoplatanus, Fagus sylvatica, Fraxinus excelsior, Prunus spp and of course various cypresses.
  22. This was when I got them:001_smile: http://arbtalk.co.uk/forum/firewood-forum/3273-vented-bulk-bags-co-operative.html
  23. The bags that I am using are vented .8m3 so no problems with mould, in fact they're working really well.
  24. Anyone know the going rate ? I have around 90 0.8 cube bags already filled and enough split wood to fill another 120 but I was thinking of selling the rest wholesale in small bags. What are the small bags wholesale / retail prices like round your way, up here a 90x50 cm bag sells for between £4.50 and 6.50 retail.

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